Sohail Afridi elected chief minister of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province

Newly-elected Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Sohail Afridi (left), and former Chief Minister, Ali Amin Gandapur, are pictured in the KP assembly in Peshawar, Pakistan, on October 13, 2025. (KP government)
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Updated 13 October 2025
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Sohail Afridi elected chief minister of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province

  • Afridi, a close ally of Imran Khan, wins assembly vote after Gandapur’s resignation
  • Newly elected leader vows to end class and political discrimination in first address

ISLAMABAD: Lawmakers in Pakistan’s northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on Monday elected Sohail Afridi as their new chief minister, replacing Ali Amin Gandapur who resigned last week amid internal reshuffling in the party of former prime minister Imran Khan.

Afridi, the nominee of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, secured a majority in the provincial assembly, which met in Peshawar for the leadership vote. The PTI holds a commanding presence in the 145-member house, making Afridi’s victory a foregone conclusion.

“I thank Imran Khan for getting a person like me, from the middle class, elected as Chief Minister,” Afridi said on X. “I am thanking the tribal Imran Khan. We have to end caste, political discrimination, and the difference between rich and poor.”

The assembly vote followed a week of political maneuvering within PTI after Khan, who remains imprisoned on multiple charges, directed Gandapur to step down amid concerns about governance and the deteriorating security situation in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The province, which borders Afghanistan, has witnessed a resurgence of militant attacks by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other groups in recent months.

Gandapur, who took office last year after PTI’s victory in provincial elections, was considered one of Khan’s most loyal allies. His removal underscores growing internal recalibration as the party seeks to maintain its hold on Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, its political stronghold since 2013, while facing pressure from the federal government and the military establishment.

Afridi, a legislator from Bara district near the Afghan border, is expected to face significant challenges, including rebuilding provincial finances and curbing cross-border militancy. Analysts say his leadership will be closely watched as a test of PTI’s ability to govern effectively while its founder remains in prison.


Pakistan reaffirms commitment to clamp down on informal sector to encourage investment

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Pakistan reaffirms commitment to clamp down on informal sector to encourage investment

  • Nestlé delegation briefs Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on localization, efficiency enhancements in Pakistan
  • Improved compliance, transparency, strengthened tax ecosystem central to economic recovery, stresses finance minister

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb reaffirmed the government’s commitment to clamp down on the informal sector on Monday, the Finance Division said, citing transparency and a strengthened tax ecosystem as central to the country’s economic recovery. 

Pakistan’s government has cracked down on smuggled items and tightened enforcement in poorly taxed sectors, such as tobacco, in recent months as it pushes ahead with its efforts to maximize tax collection by discouraging the formal sector. Informal sector comprises businesses that operate outside the tax net, avoid registration and as a result, neglect regulatory oversight and violate quality, safety or labor standards. 

Aurangzeb met a delegation from Nestlé Pakistan at the Finance Division, where the two sides discussed the multinational’s efforts to strengthen its operations in the country through localization, portfolio adjustments and efficiency enhancements. 

“Emphasizing the government’s resolve to clamp down on the informal sector, an effort that has already begun yielding visible results in multiple industries, the finance minister noted that improved compliance, transparency and a strengthened tax ecosystem are central to Pakistan’s economic recovery,” the Finance Division said in a statement. 

Nestlé Pakistan Chief Executive Officer Jason Avancena provided an overview of the organization’s operations, claiming it had strengthened them through localization, portfolio adjustments, advanced automation, efficiency enhancements and continued innovation across product categories. 

Avancena said Nestlé is implementing solar and biomass energy systems, digital dashboards, environmentally improved packaging, and supply-chain automation in Pakistan. The delegation highlighted that Nestlé’s localization efforts have materially strengthened its resilience. 

“They noted that through sustained efforts to localize raw materials and reconfigure product portfolios, Nestlé Pakistan has reduced its import volumes by nearly half over the past three years from around $150 million to approximately $76–80 million, thereby minimizing exposure to foreign-exchange pressures and deepening integration with Pakistan’s agricultural and manufacturing base,” the Finance Division said. 

Aurangzeb commended the multinational for its efforts and underscored the government’s intention to facilitate greater formalization and enhanced tax equity across the food and beverages sector. He noted that informal players have “rapidly expanded” their market share by operating outside the tax net in sectors such as food and beverages. 

The delegation also discussed export performance, including the company’s presence in markets such as the United States, Canada, the Gulf, and the United Kingdom, sharing insights into challenges related to regional trade, particularly the Afghanistan corridor. 

Aurangzeb advised Nestlé to explore logistics partnerships to expand access to Central Asian markets, reiterating that Islamabad remains committed to enabling export-oriented industry growth.